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England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> RG v TA (Appeal: Legal Services Funding Order: Schedule 1 Children Act 1989) [2023] EWHC 3155 (Fam) (06 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2023/3155.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 3155 (Fam) |
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Appeal Court Ref No: FA-2023-0000115 |
FAMILY DIVISION
On appeal from Her Honour Judge Ellis
sitting in the Family Court at Gloucester
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
RG |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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TA |
Respondent |
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(Apeal: Legal services funding order: Schedule 1 Children Act 1989) |
____________________
Jennifer Kavanagh (instructed by Wilson Family Law) for the respondent
Hearing date: June 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Roberts:
Current litigation: the applications before the Family Court
The father's case in relation to financial disparity and inequality of arms: the picture presented to the court in April 2023
"The court then has to look at what the mother has available to her. I am very careful not to fall into the trap of saying that, because she has an inheritance due of some billions of dollars, therefore she must have money available to her now. I appreciate that would be a flawed argument that I cannot follow. I have to at this stage be able to point to monies that she has available to her which can be made available to my client in terms of meeting fees. And what I do from that is I say that, firstly, she has got her income. It appears to be much lower at the moment than it has been in recent times, but, in any event, it is topped up by additional payments."[4]
The law
(a) the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success (r.30.3(7)(a)); or
(b) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard (r.30.3(7)(b)).
a. is wrong as a result of –
i. an error of law;
ii. the absence of sufficient material to enable the judge to make findings of fact or assessments of witnesses as they appear in the judgment;
iii. where a discretion arises, the order made was outside the ambit of judicial discretion;
iv. a failure in the discretionary exercise to take into account something that is relevant, or to exclude from account something that is irrelevant; or
b. the decision is tainted by a procedural or other irregularity that renders it unjust[7].
The judge's reasoning
"Simply because of shortage of time, I am not going to run through here what is contained in the written notes about those principles. I say "simply because of a shortage of time", but the other reason, of course, is that there is no dispute between the parties about the legal principles, as I would of course give a determination on any disputed legal matter".
(i) whether the father had a good claim in this case;
(ii) whether he needed legal assistance in order to achieve equality of arms in terms of representation;
(iii) whether he was in a financial position to meet that legal assistance himself;
(iv) if not, whether the mother was in a financial position to meet that funding;
(v) if so, what would be the correct provision to make in terms of her contribution to his legal costs.
(i) the first was misleading information in relation to his income in that the information presented to the court reflected only the two lowest payslips which were not representative of the position gong forward;
(ii) the second was his failure to provide adequate information about his borrowing capacity. Whilst she acknowledged that he had produced evidence of having been refused a litigation loan, there was no information about the basis for that refusal and the extent to which the potential lender was informed about his income, property interests and the lump sum which would be forthcoming from his police pension in 2024;
(iii) the third lay in his failure to demonstrate that he could not fund legal costs through a credit card. In circumstances where the mother had funded part of her own costs through an American Express card, this should have been an option available to the father in view of his declared income.
The father's appeal
Ground 1
Ground 2
(i) In relation to her finding that he had attempted to mislead the court in relation to his income by relying on figures for the two lowest paid months, the judge failed to take into account that this evidence was provided in a witness statement sworn in March 2023 at which point these were the only available pay slips from his newly created gardening business. In addition, she failed to refer in her judgment to the pay slip which he had subsequently produced for March 2023. That had been included in the supplemental bundle which was before the court and revealed higher figures.
(ii) The judge fell into error in finding that the father had not adduced any sufficient evidence in relation to his ability to obtain credit by opening an account with a credit card provider. Given the budget which he had presented to the court with his legal costs funding application and the existing liabilities he was carrying, this was never likely to be a viable alternative route to funding legal costs and the judge failed to make a robust assumption to this effect. Further, there was insufficient evidence before the court for the judge's assumption that the mother had funded part of her legal costs on her credit card. Her bank statements disclosed that her costs had been paid from her bank account until the month before the hearing in April 2023.
(iii) In relation to commercial litigation funding, the judge fell into error in rejecting the evidence from Warner Austin Mortgage Services Ltd (15 March 2023) and two separate commercial providers each of which had indicated that they were not prepared to assist with litigation funding. This evidence should have been considered against the totality of the evidence before the court including an email from his solicitors to the commercial funder setting out the father's financial circumstances.
(iv) In relation to his unencumbered 50% interest in the property occupied by his former wife and their two children, the court was wrong to reject his evidence that a lender would not regard that interest as sufficient security for a litigation loan.
The law: Currey v Currey (No 2) and Rubin v Rubin
"20. In my view the initial, overarching enquiry is into whether the applicant for a costs allowance can demonstrate that she cannot reasonably procure legal advice and representation by any other means. Thus, to the extent that she has assets, the applicant has to demonstrate that they cannot reasonably be deployed, whether directly or as the means of raising a loan, in funding legal services. Furthermore ….. she also has to demonstrate that she cannot reasonably procure legal services by the offer of a charge upon ultimate capital recovery. I would add, fourthly, that the court also needs to be satisfied that there is no such public funding available to the applicant as would furnish her with legal advice and representation at a level of expertise apt to the proceedings …."
"[13] …..
(i) When considering the overall merits of the application for a LSPO, the court is required to have regard to all matters mentioned in s 22ZB(1)-(3).
(ii) Without derogating from that requirement, the ability of the respondent to pay should be judged by reference to the principles summarised in TL v ML (Ancillary Relief: Claim Against Assets of Extended Family) [2005] EWHC 2860 (Fam), [2006] 1 FLR 1263, at para [124](iv) and (v), where it was stated:
'(iv) Where the affidavit or Form E disclosure by the payer is obviously deficient the court should not hesitate to make robust assumptions about his ability to pay. The court is not confined to the mere say-so of the payer as to the extent of his income or resources. In such a situation the court should err in favour of the payee.
(v) Where the paying party has historically been supported through the bounty of an outsider, and where the payer is asserting that the bounty had been curtailed but where the position of the outsider is ambiguous or unclear, then the court is justified in assuming that the third party will continue to supply the county, at least until the final trial.'
(iii) Where the claim for substantive relief appears doubtful, whether by virtue of a challenge to the jurisdiction, or otherwise having regard to its subject matter, the court should judge the application with caution. The more doubtful it is, the more cautious it should be.
(iv) The court cannot make an order unless it is satisfied that without the payment the applicant would not reasonably be able to obtain appropriate legal services for the proceedings. Therefore, the exercise essentially looks to the future. It is important that the jurisdiction is not used to outflank or supplant the powers and principles governing an award of costs in CPRF Part 44. It is not a surrogate inter partes costs jurisdiction. Thus a LSPO should only be awarded to cover historic unpaid costs where the court is satisfied that without such a payment the applicant will not reasonably be able to obtain in the future appropriate legal services for the proceedings.
(v) In determining whether the applicant can reasonably obtain funding from another source the court would be unlikely to expect her to sell or charge her home or to deplete a modest fund of savings. This aspect is however highly fact-specific. If the home is of such a value that it appears likely that it will be sold at the conclusion of the proceedings then it may well be reasonable to expect the applicant to charge her interest in it.
(vi) Evidence of refusals by two commercial lenders f repute will normally dispose of any issue under s 22ZA(4)(a) whether a litigation loan is or is not available.
(vii) In determining under s 22ZA(4)(b) whether a Sears Tooth arrangement can be entered into, a statement of refusal by the applicant's solicitors should normally answer the question.
(viii) If a litigation loan is offered at a very high rate of interest it would be unlikely to be reasonable to expect the applicant to take it unless the respondent offered an undertaking to meet that interest, if the court later considered it just so to order.
(ix) The order should normally contain an undertaking by the applicant that she will repay to the respondent such part of the amount ordered if, and to the extent that, the court is of the opinion, when considering costs at the conclusion of the proceedings, that she should do so. If such an undertaking is refused the court will want to think twice before making the order.
(x) The court should make it clear in its ruling or judgment which of the legal services mentioned in s 22ZA(10) the payment is for; it is not however necessary to spell this out in the order. A LSPO may be made for the purposes, in particular, of advice and assistance in the form of representation and any form of dispute resolution, including mediation. Thus the power may be exercised before any financial remedy proceedings have been commenced in order to finance any form of alternative dispute resolution, which plainly would include arbitration proceedings.
(xi) Generally speaking, the court should not fund the applicant beyond the [financial] dispute resolution (FDR), but the court should readily grant a hearing date for further funding to be fixed shortly after the FDR. This is a better course than ordering a sum for the whole proceedings of which part is deferred under s 22ZA(7). The court will be better placed to assess accurately the true costs of taking the matter to trial after a failed FDR when the final hearing is relatively imminent, and the issues to be tried are more clearly defined.
……."
My decision
Next steps
Postscript: post-judgment representations
"(i) It is very regrettable that the court was not informed about the repayment of the £145,000 given that this was the resource which was the specific target of the original application for the legal costs funding order. This would not have required a separate application for permission to adduce fresh evidence. It was clearly relevant information in relation to the arguments on the appeal.
(ii) In terms of the substantive order I had proposed to make, it is clear that it would have been framed as a contingent lump sum order. I identified the loan repayment as the only viable means of making provision for the father's legal costs. I said, "I accept that the order I am making is a contingent lump sum because it depends on funds materialising from a specific source". I also made it plain in para 67 that if the loan was not repaid, both parties were likely to find themselves in a similar predicament in terms of funding ongoing legal representation (i.e. they were both likely to be without representation for the purposes of the forthcoming fact-finding hearing, a situation I was hoping to avoid).
(iii) There is no doubt that the court has, and had, the power to vary any order made in the court below. I accept that a rehearing was the route which was being canvassed both by the parties and the court as proceedings commenced. Having had time to reflect on the next steps as I prepared my judgment, and because of my finding that the sum of £145,000 was the only available resource at this point in time from which the order could be made, I considered it wholly disproportionate and not in accordance with the overriding objective to require the parties to fund (from where ?) another expensive round of litigation in the Sch 1 proceedings when the issues and the evidence were unlikely to have changed. Of course at that stage I was wholly unaware that this potential resource no longer existed in that funds had been repaid and used to expunge existing debt. To this extent, I accept that the court proceeded on what was essentially a mistake of fact.
(iii) …. I am unlikely to change my fundamental findings in relation to the resources currently available to these parties. If the funds flowing from the repayment of the loan have been used in their entirety to discharge existing debt, that resource no longer exists. It is hard to see how the court might be justified in embarking upon an expensive trawl through how the funds were applied and/or whether the repayment of debt had affected the mother's ability to borrow to pay the father the half share I anticipated he should have."
"In respect of the new evidence which the mother now provides my client is of course very surprised that in the knowledge that this matter was being appealed she asserts that she has spent the full c.£190,000 within a short period of it being repaid and without even notifying the court of this at the appeal hearing. Any assertion that this was not relevant being totally without merit.
My client cannot afford any further fees to be incurred in this matter and I am instructed to submit as follows:
1. The court determined this matter on the evidence put before it at the appeal hearing and the Court was aware of all pre-existing liabilities when making its decision and by implication must have determined that funds be made available for my client before any other liabilities were repaid.
2. The court's decision to make an order was well within the court's discretion under the rules.
3. The mother's new assertions post draft judgment appear to be an attempt to appeal via the back door.
On this basis the court is invited to finalise the judgment in this matter and allow for submissions on costs within 14 days."
My order in relation to legal services funding provision
"(i) To the extent that the respondent receives from [PP] repayment of the loan or any part thereof which is due and payable in the principal sum of £145,000, she shall pay to the appellant's solicitors, Michelmores LLP, by way of a legal services funding payment a sum equal to 50% of any sum or sums received.
(ii) For these purposes the court has determined that she shall be entitled to retain for her own use and benefit the interest element of any repayment made or received on the basis that such payment represents the consideration due to the respondent for having been unable to use or deploy the sum of £145,000 (which represents the principal loan) throughout the loan period."
Order accordingly
Note 1 Information referenced in one of the lengthy annexes to her Form E. [Back] Note 2 [561] (transcript of hearing on 28 April 2023) [Back] Note 4 [561] (transcript of hearing on 28 April 2023) [Back] Note 5 [563] (transcript of the hearing on 28 April 2023) [Back] Note 7 See Re W (Permission to Appeal) [2007] EWCA Civ 786, [2008] 1 FLR 406 [Back] Note 8 [115] The father has accepted in a witness statement dated 23 March 2023 that a successful outcome in the Sch 1 proceedings will be confined to whatever the court determines in relation to his own and the children’s needs for housing and income. [Back] Note 10 The father’s company was registered as a subcontractor and as such he was required to pay tax deductions at the lower rate of 20% as opposed to the 30% payable in the case of an unregistered subcontractor. For these reasons tax deductions would not necessarily be reflected in monthly pay slips. [Back]